ATMS 120
Fall 2008 All Classes
Credit: 3 hours.
Most extreme manifestations of weather and climate are analyzed in terms of their physical basis and their historical, economic and human consequences. Emphasis is placed on the interplay between technological advances, the evolution of meteorology as a science, and the impacts of extreme weather (winter storms, floods, severe thunderstorms, hurricanes, El Nino). Technological advances include satellites, weather radars and profilers, and computer models used for weather prediction.
This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in
Fall 2022 for:
| CRN | Type | Section | Time | Day | Location | Instructor | Section Details | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
31290
|
Lecture
|
A
|
1:30PM
-2:45PM
|
TR
|
150 Animal Sciences Laboratory
|
Dooley, A
Stewart, B Harnos, D |
|
|
|
31291
|
Lecture
|
B
|
10:30AM
-11:45AM
|
TR
|
314 Altgeld Hall
|
Snodgrass, E
|
|
|
|
31292
|
Lecture
|
C
|
12:00PM
-1:15PM
|
TR
|
103 Mumford Hall
|
Snodgrass, E
|
|
|
|
52342
|
Discussion/
Recitation
Lecture
|
HA
HA
|
ARRANGED
1:30PM
-2:45PM
|
n.a.
TR
|
Location Pending
150 Animal Sciences Laboratory
|
Dooley, A
Dooley, A
|
|
|
|
52474
|
Discussion/
Recitation
Lecture
|
HB
HB
|
ARRANGED
10:30AM
-11:45AM
|
n.a.
TR
|
Location Pending
314 Altgeld Hall
|
Snodgrass, E
Snodgrass, E
|
|
|
|
52475
|
Discussion/
Recitation
Lecture
|
HC
HC
|
ARRANGED
12:00PM
-1:15PM
|
n.a.
TR
|
Location Pending
103 Mumford Hall
|
Snodgrass, E
Snodgrass, E
|
|